ENI S.P.A.
Commented by Jens Castner on July 15th, 2026 | 08:35 CEST
Between the Oil Price Rally and Climate Billions: How Shell, Eni, and Zefiro Methane Are Profiting
The escalating conflict between the US and Iran is driving oil prices sharply higher—and with them, the share prices of energy companies like Shell and Eni. For their shareholders, that is the good news. The bad news: ironically, the very oil multinationals currently profiting from the crisis are viewed by the public as greedy climate offenders. To polish up their image, they are among the largest buyers of voluntary CO₂ credits. Many of these, however, are of dubious quality. Anyone looking for a solution to this problem almost inevitably ends up at Zefiro Methane, a largely undiscovered small-cap stock from Canada. The company addresses precisely the issues where Shell and Eni are struggling the most.
ReadCommented by André Will-Laudien on October 29th, 2020 | 13:36 CET
ENI, Royal Dutch Shell, Saturn Oil & Gas - scandals and crash!
Six months ago, leading oil producers and the G20 energy ministers met to coordinate an emergency package of production cuts. The aim was to at least compensate for the drop in demand caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. At that time, it was impossible to know how significant the damage from the pandemic would be and for how long a real recovery would take. Now the production is somewhat lower, and existing oil stocks are gradually fading, but the uncertain prospects remain, as can be seen from the very low forward prices. In the longer term, producers are currently not very encouraged, as the curve shows that prices are unlikely to reach the USD 50.00 per barrel mark by the end of 2023. Those who want to bring about a shortage in the oil market have a monster task ahead of them, because "there is plenty of oil and a slowing economy".
ReadCommented by Mario Hose on May 19th, 2020 | 15:56 CEST
BP, Chevron, ENI, Saturn Oil & Gas, Shell, Total - what investors need to know now
About a month ago, market participants around the world learned that the end of a price slide does not have to end at zero on the expiry date of WTI contracts. Anyone who thought that a barrel of American WTI at USD 0.01, which is 159 litres of crude oil, would be a special bargain on the expiration date and took the chance was taught an expensive lesson. The expiration date of 20 April 2020 will go down in history with an initial negative settlement price of USD -37.63. The USA is known to be the land of opportunity and this seems to be another chapter.
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